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Nicomedia

Nicomedia (/ˌnɪkəˈmdiə/;[1] Greek: Νικομήδεια, Nikomedeia; modern İzmit) was an ancient Greek city located in what is now Turkey. In 286, Nicomedia became the eastern and most senior capital city of the Roman Empire (chosen by the emperor Diocletian who ruled in the east), a status which the city maintained during the Tetrarchy system (293–324).

Nicomedia
French illustration of Nicomedia, 1882
Shown within Turkey
Nicomedia (Sea of Marmara)
LocationTurkey
Regionİzmit, Kocaeli Province
Coordinates40°45′45″N 29°55′03″E / 40.76250°N 29.91750°E / 40.76250; 29.91750

The Tetrarchy ended with the Battle of Chrysopolis (Üsküdar) in 324, when Constantine defeated Licinius and became the sole emperor. In 330 Constantine chose for himself the nearby Byzantium (which was renamed Constantinople, modern Istanbul) as the new capital of the Roman Empire.

The city was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire with the victory of Sultan Orhan Gazi against the Byzantine Empire. The Byzantines managed to retake it in the aftermath of the Battle of Ankara, but it fell definitively to the Ottomans in 1419.

History edit

It was founded in 712–11 BC as a Megarian colony and was originally known as Astacus (/ˈæstəkəs/; Ancient Greek: Ἀστακός, 'lobster').[2] After being destroyed by Lysimachus,[3] it was rebuilt by Nicomedes I of Bithynia in 264 BC under the name of Nicomedia, and has ever since been one of the most important cities in northwestern Asia Minor. The great military commander Hannibal Barca came to Nicomedia in his final years and committed suicide in nearby Libyssa (Diliskelesi, Gebze). The historian Arrian was born there.

 
This section of a belt depicting medallions honoring Constantius II and Faustina was minted in Nicomedia.[4] The Walters Art Museum.

Nicomedia was the metropolis and capital of the Roman province of Bithynia under the Roman Empire. It is referenced repeatedly in Pliny the Younger's Epistles to Trajan during his tenure as governor of Bithynia.[5] Pliny, in his letters, mentions several public buildings of the city such as a senate-house, an aqueduct, a forum, a temple of Cybele, and others, and speaks of a great fire, during which the place suffered much.[6] Diocletian made it the eastern capital city of the Roman Empire in 286 when he introduced the Tetrarchy system.

Persecutions of 303 edit

Nicomedia was at the center of the Diocletianic Persecution of Christians which occurred under Diocletian and his Caesar Galerius. On 23 February 303 AD, the pagan festival of the Terminalia, Diocletian ordered that the newly built church at Nicomedia be razed, its scriptures burnt, and its precious stones seized.[7] The next day he issued his "First Edict Against the Christians," which ordered similar measures to be taken at churches across the Empire.

The destruction of the Nicomedia church incited panic in the city, and at the end of the month a fire destroyed part of Diocletian's palace, followed 16 days later by another fire.[8] Although an investigation was made into the cause of the fires, no party was officially charged, but Galerius placed the blame on the Christians. He oversaw the execution of two palace eunuchs, who he claimed conspired with the Christians to start the fire, followed by six more executions through the end of April 303. Soon after Galerius declared Nicomedia to be unsafe and ostentatiously departed the city for Rome, followed soon after by Diocletian.[8]

Later Empire edit

 
Map of the Roman Empire during the Tetrarchy system, showing the dioceses and the four tetrarchs' zones of influence. Nicomedia was the eastern and most senior capital city, chosen by Diocletian who assumed the title Augustus of the East.

Nicomedia remained as the eastern (and most senior) capital of the Roman Empire until co-emperor Licinius was defeated by Constantine the Great at the Battle of Chrysopolis (Üsküdar) in 324. Constantine mainly resided in Nicomedia as his interim capital city for the next six years, until in 330 he declared the nearby Byzantium (which was renamed Constantinople) the new capital. Constantine died in a royal villa in the vicinity of Nicomedia in 337. Owing to its position at the convergence of the Asiatic roads leading to the new capital, Nicomedia retained its importance even after the foundation of Constantinople.[9]

A major earthquake, however, on 24 August 358, caused extensive devastation to Nicomedia, and was followed by a fire which completed the catastrophe. Nicomedia was rebuilt, but on a smaller scale.[10] In the sixth century under Emperor Justinian I the city was extended with new public buildings. Situated on the roads leading to the capital, the city remained a major military center, playing an important role in the Byzantine campaigns against the Caliphate.[11] From inscriptions we learn that in the later period of the empire Nicomedia enjoyed the honour of a Roman colony.[12]

In 451, the local bishopric was promoted to a Metropolitan see under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.[13] The metropolis of Nicomedia was ranked 7th in the Notitiae Episcopatuum among the metropolises of the patriarchate.[14] In the eighth century the Emperor Constantine V established his court there for a time, when plague broke out in Constantinople and drove him from his capital in 746–47.[15] From the 840s on, Nicomedia was the capital of the thema of the Optimatoi. By that time, most of the old, seawards city had been abandoned and is described by the Persian geographer Ibn Khurdadhbih as lying in ruins, with settlement restricted to the hilltop citadel.[11] In the 1080s, the city served as the main military base for Alexios I Komnenos in his campaigns against the Seljuk Turks, and the First and Second Crusades both encamped there.

The city was briefly held by the Latin Empire following the fall of Constantinople to the Fourth Crusade in 1204: in late 1206 the seneschal Thierry de Loos made it his base, converting the church of Saint Sophia into a fortress; however, the Crusader stronghold was subjected to constant raids by the Emperor of Nicaea Theodore I Laskaris, during which de Loos was captured by Nicaean soldiers; by the summer of 1207 Emperor Henry of Flanders agreed to evacuate Nicomedia in exchange for de Loos and other prisoners Emperor Theodore held.[16] The city remained in Byzantine control for over a century after that, but following the Byzantine defeat at the Battle of Bapheus in 1302, it was threatened by the rising Ottoman beylik. The city was twice sieged and blockaded by the Ottomans (in 1304 and 1330) before finally succumbing in 1337.[11]

The city remained in Ottoman hands until the Battle of Ankara and subsequent Ottoman Interregnum weakened them enough for the neighbouring states to demand the return of their conquered lands from the warring Ottoman princes in exchange for their support against the other princes. In this way the Byzantines secured considerable territorial concessions including Nicomedia and other lands on the east side of the Bosphorus. However, this last period of Byzantine rule was rather short-lived, as Nicomedia was definitively taken by the Ottomans around 1419.

Infrastructure edit

During the Empire, Nicomedia was a cosmopolitan and commercially prosperous city which received all the amenities appropriate for a major Roman city. Nicomedia was well known for having a bountiful water supply from two to three aqueducts,[17] one of which was built in Hellenistic times. Pliny the Younger complains in his Epistulae to Trajan, written in 110 AD, that the Nicomedians wasted 3,318,000 sesterces on an unfinished aqueduct which twice ran into engineering troubles. Trajan instructs him to take steps to complete the aqueduct, and to investigate possible official corruption behind the large waste of money.[18] Under Trajan, there was also a large Roman garrison.[19] Other public amenities included a theatre, a colonnaded street typical of Hellenistic cities and a forum.[20]

The major religious shrine was a temple of Demeter, which stood in a sacred precinct on a hill above the harbor.[5] The city adopted official cults of Rome avidly, there were temples dedicated to the Emperor Commodus,[21] a sacred precinct of the city dedicated to Augustus,[22] and a temple of Roma dedicated during the late-Republic.[5]

The city was sacked in AD 253 by the Goths, but when Diocletian made the city his capital in 283 AD he undertook grand restorations and built an enormous palace, an armory, mint, and new shipyards.[5]

Notable natives and residents edit

Remains edit

 
Ruins of a Nicomedian aqueduct in İzmit

The ruins of Nicomedia are buried beneath the densely populated modern city of İzmit, which has largely obstructed comprehensive excavation. Before the urbanization of the 20th century occurred, select ruins of the Roman-era city could be seen, most prominently sections of the Roman defensive walls which surrounded the city and multiple aqueducts which once supplied Nicomedia's water. Other monuments include the foundations of a 2nd-century AD marble nymphaeum on İstanbul street, a large cistern in the city's Jewish cemetery, and parts of the harbor wall.[5]

The 1999 İzmit earthquake, which seriously damaged most of the city, also led to major discoveries of ancient Nicomedia during the subsequent debris clearing. A wealth of ancient statuary was uncovered, including statues of Hercules, Athena, Diocletian and Constantine.[23]

In the years after the earthquake, the Izmit Provincial Cultural Directorate appropriated small areas for excavation, including the site identified as Diocletian's Palace and a nearby Roman theatre. In April 2016 a more extensive excavation of the palace was begun under the supervision of the Kocaeli Museum, which estimated that the site covers 60,000 square meters (196,850 square feet).[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-09-30. Retrieved 2012-07-03.
  2. ^ Peter Levi, ed. (1971). Guide to Greece By Pausanias. Harmondsworth] Penguin. p. 232. ISBN 0-14-044225-1.
  3. ^ Cohen, Getzel M. (1995). The Hellenistic settlements in Europe, the islands, and Asia Minor. p. 400. ISBN 0-520-08329-6.
  4. ^ "Belt Section with Medallions of Constantius II and Faustina". The Walters Art Museum.
  5. ^ a b c d e W.L. MacDonald (1976). "NICOMEDIA NW Turkey". The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites. Princeton University Press.
  6. ^ Pliny the Younger, Epist. 10.33.
  7. ^ Timothy D. Barnes (1981). Constantine & Eusebius. p. 22.
  8. ^ a b Patricia Southern (2001). The Roman Empire: From Severus to Constantine. p. 168.
  9. ^ See C. Texier, Asie mineure (Paris, 1839); V. Cuenet, Turquie d'Asie (Paris, 1894).
  10. ^ See Ammianus Marcellinus 17.7.1–8
  11. ^ a b c Kazhdan, Alexander, ed. (1991), Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, Oxford University Press, pp. 1483–1484, ISBN 978-0-19-504652-6
  12. ^   Smith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Nicomedeia". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.
  13. ^ Kiminas, Demetrius (2009). The Ecumenical Patriarchate. Wildside Press LLC. p. 79. ISBN 978-1-4344-5876-6.
  14. ^ Terezakis, Yorgos. "Diocese of Nicomedia (Ottoman Period)". Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Μείζονος Ελληνισμού, Μ. Ασία. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
  15. ^ David Turner, The Politics of Despair: The Plague of 746–747 and Iconoclasm in the Byzantine Empire, The Annual of the British School at Athens, Vol. 85 (1990), p428
  16. ^ Geoffrey de Villehardouin, translated by M. R. B. Shaw, Joinville and Villehardouin: Chronicles of the Crusades (London: Penguin, 1963), pp. 147, 154–56
  17. ^ Libanius. Oratories. p. 61.7.18.
  18. ^ Pliny the Younger. Epistulae. p. 10.37 & .38.
  19. ^ Pliny the Younger. Epistles. p. 10.74.
  20. ^ Pliny the Younger. Epistles. p. 10.49.
  21. ^ Dio Cassius. Roman History. p. 73.12.2.
  22. ^ Cassius Dio. Roman History. p. 51.20.7.
  23. ^ "Ancient underground city in izmit excites archaeology world". Hürriyet Daily News. 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2018-01-14.
  24. ^ "Ancient underground city in izmit excites archaeology world". Hürriyet Daily News. 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2018-01-14.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSmith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Nicomedeia". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.

nicomedia, greek, Νικομήδεια, nikomedeia, modern, izmit, ancient, greek, city, located, what, turkey, became, eastern, most, senior, capital, city, roman, empire, chosen, emperor, diocletian, ruled, east, status, which, city, maintained, during, tetrarchy, sys. Nicomedia ˌ n ɪ k e ˈ m iː d i e 1 Greek Nikomhdeia Nikomedeia modern Izmit was an ancient Greek city located in what is now Turkey In 286 Nicomedia became the eastern and most senior capital city of the Roman Empire chosen by the emperor Diocletian who ruled in the east a status which the city maintained during the Tetrarchy system 293 324 NicomediaFrench illustration of Nicomedia 1882Shown within TurkeyShow map of TurkeyNicomedia Sea of Marmara Show map of Sea of MarmaraLocationTurkeyRegionIzmit Kocaeli ProvinceCoordinates40 45 45 N 29 55 03 E 40 76250 N 29 91750 E 40 76250 29 91750The Tetrarchy ended with the Battle of Chrysopolis Uskudar in 324 when Constantine defeated Licinius and became the sole emperor In 330 Constantine chose for himself the nearby Byzantium which was renamed Constantinople modern Istanbul as the new capital of the Roman Empire The city was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire with the victory of Sultan Orhan Gazi against the Byzantine Empire The Byzantines managed to retake it in the aftermath of the Battle of Ankara but it fell definitively to the Ottomans in 1419 Contents 1 History 1 1 Persecutions of 303 1 2 Later Empire 2 Infrastructure 3 Notable natives and residents 4 Remains 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory editIt was founded in 712 11 BC as a Megarian colony and was originally known as Astacus ˈ ae s t e k e s Ancient Greek Ἀstakos lobster 2 After being destroyed by Lysimachus 3 it was rebuilt by Nicomedes I of Bithynia in 264 BC under the name of Nicomedia and has ever since been one of the most important cities in northwestern Asia Minor The great military commander Hannibal Barca came to Nicomedia in his final years and committed suicide in nearby Libyssa Diliskelesi Gebze The historian Arrian was born there nbsp This section of a belt depicting medallions honoring Constantius II and Faustina was minted in Nicomedia 4 The Walters Art Museum Nicomedia was the metropolis and capital of the Roman province of Bithynia under the Roman Empire It is referenced repeatedly in Pliny the Younger s Epistles to Trajan during his tenure as governor of Bithynia 5 Pliny in his letters mentions several public buildings of the city such as a senate house an aqueduct a forum a temple of Cybele and others and speaks of a great fire during which the place suffered much 6 Diocletian made it the eastern capital city of the Roman Empire in 286 when he introduced the Tetrarchy system Persecutions of 303 edit Nicomedia was at the center of the Diocletianic Persecution of Christians which occurred under Diocletian and his Caesar Galerius On 23 February 303 AD the pagan festival of the Terminalia Diocletian ordered that the newly built church at Nicomedia be razed its scriptures burnt and its precious stones seized 7 The next day he issued his First Edict Against the Christians which ordered similar measures to be taken at churches across the Empire The destruction of the Nicomedia church incited panic in the city and at the end of the month a fire destroyed part of Diocletian s palace followed 16 days later by another fire 8 Although an investigation was made into the cause of the fires no party was officially charged but Galerius placed the blame on the Christians He oversaw the execution of two palace eunuchs who he claimed conspired with the Christians to start the fire followed by six more executions through the end of April 303 Soon after Galerius declared Nicomedia to be unsafe and ostentatiously departed the city for Rome followed soon after by Diocletian 8 Later Empire edit nbsp Map of the Roman Empire during the Tetrarchy system showing the dioceses and the four tetrarchs zones of influence Nicomedia was the eastern and most senior capital city chosen by Diocletian who assumed the title Augustus of the East Nicomedia remained as the eastern and most senior capital of the Roman Empire until co emperor Licinius was defeated by Constantine the Great at the Battle of Chrysopolis Uskudar in 324 Constantine mainly resided in Nicomedia as his interim capital city for the next six years until in 330 he declared the nearby Byzantium which was renamed Constantinople the new capital Constantine died in a royal villa in the vicinity of Nicomedia in 337 Owing to its position at the convergence of the Asiatic roads leading to the new capital Nicomedia retained its importance even after the foundation of Constantinople 9 A major earthquake however on 24 August 358 caused extensive devastation to Nicomedia and was followed by a fire which completed the catastrophe Nicomedia was rebuilt but on a smaller scale 10 In the sixth century under Emperor Justinian I the city was extended with new public buildings Situated on the roads leading to the capital the city remained a major military center playing an important role in the Byzantine campaigns against the Caliphate 11 From inscriptions we learn that in the later period of the empire Nicomedia enjoyed the honour of a Roman colony 12 In 451 the local bishopric was promoted to a Metropolitan see under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople 13 The metropolis of Nicomedia was ranked 7th in the Notitiae Episcopatuum among the metropolises of the patriarchate 14 In the eighth century the Emperor Constantine V established his court there for a time when plague broke out in Constantinople and drove him from his capital in 746 47 15 From the 840s on Nicomedia was the capital of the thema of the Optimatoi By that time most of the old seawards city had been abandoned and is described by the Persian geographer Ibn Khurdadhbih as lying in ruins with settlement restricted to the hilltop citadel 11 In the 1080s the city served as the main military base for Alexios I Komnenos in his campaigns against the Seljuk Turks and the First and Second Crusades both encamped there The city was briefly held by the Latin Empire following the fall of Constantinople to the Fourth Crusade in 1204 in late 1206 the seneschal Thierry de Loos made it his base converting the church of Saint Sophia into a fortress however the Crusader stronghold was subjected to constant raids by the Emperor of Nicaea Theodore I Laskaris during which de Loos was captured by Nicaean soldiers by the summer of 1207 Emperor Henry of Flanders agreed to evacuate Nicomedia in exchange for de Loos and other prisoners Emperor Theodore held 16 The city remained in Byzantine control for over a century after that but following the Byzantine defeat at the Battle of Bapheus in 1302 it was threatened by the rising Ottoman beylik The city was twice sieged and blockaded by the Ottomans in 1304 and 1330 before finally succumbing in 1337 11 The city remained in Ottoman hands until the Battle of Ankara and subsequent Ottoman Interregnum weakened them enough for the neighbouring states to demand the return of their conquered lands from the warring Ottoman princes in exchange for their support against the other princes In this way the Byzantines secured considerable territorial concessions including Nicomedia and other lands on the east side of the Bosphorus However this last period of Byzantine rule was rather short lived as Nicomedia was definitively taken by the Ottomans around 1419 Infrastructure editDuring the Empire Nicomedia was a cosmopolitan and commercially prosperous city which received all the amenities appropriate for a major Roman city Nicomedia was well known for having a bountiful water supply from two to three aqueducts 17 one of which was built in Hellenistic times Pliny the Younger complains in his Epistulae to Trajan written in 110 AD that the Nicomedians wasted 3 318 000 sesterces on an unfinished aqueduct which twice ran into engineering troubles Trajan instructs him to take steps to complete the aqueduct and to investigate possible official corruption behind the large waste of money 18 Under Trajan there was also a large Roman garrison 19 Other public amenities included a theatre a colonnaded street typical of Hellenistic cities and a forum 20 The major religious shrine was a temple of Demeter which stood in a sacred precinct on a hill above the harbor 5 The city adopted official cults of Rome avidly there were temples dedicated to the Emperor Commodus 21 a sacred precinct of the city dedicated to Augustus 22 and a temple of Roma dedicated during the late Republic 5 The city was sacked in AD 253 by the Goths but when Diocletian made the city his capital in 283 AD he undertook grand restorations and built an enormous palace an armory mint and new shipyards 5 Notable natives and residents editDiocletian c 244 311 Roman emperor from 284 to 305 Arrian c 86 89 c after 146 160 Greek historian civil servant military commander and philosopher of the Roman period Saint George d 303 martyr Barbara of Nicomedia 3rd century martyr Pantaleon of Nicomedia d 305 martyr Adrian of Nicomedia d 306 martyr Anthimus of Nicomedia d 303 or 311 12 bishop martyr St Barbara d 200 martyr St Pantaleon c 275 d 305 martyr Juliana of Nicomedia d 304 martyr Theopemptus of Nicomedia d 303 bishop Hieromartyr Theophylact of Nicomedia d 845 bishop recognized as a Saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church Michael Psellos 1017 or 1078 c 1078 or 1096 Greek writer philosopher politician and historian Maximus Planudes c 1260 c 1305 Greek scholar anthologist translator and grammarian Aaron ben Elijah 1328 1329 1369 Karaite Jewish philosopher nbsp St Pantaleon nbsp Arrian nbsp Diocletian nbsp Licinus nbsp Saint BarbaraRemains edit nbsp Ruins of a Nicomedian aqueduct in IzmitThe ruins of Nicomedia are buried beneath the densely populated modern city of Izmit which has largely obstructed comprehensive excavation Before the urbanization of the 20th century occurred select ruins of the Roman era city could be seen most prominently sections of the Roman defensive walls which surrounded the city and multiple aqueducts which once supplied Nicomedia s water Other monuments include the foundations of a 2nd century AD marble nymphaeum on Istanbul street a large cistern in the city s Jewish cemetery and parts of the harbor wall 5 The 1999 Izmit earthquake which seriously damaged most of the city also led to major discoveries of ancient Nicomedia during the subsequent debris clearing A wealth of ancient statuary was uncovered including statues of Hercules Athena Diocletian and Constantine 23 In the years after the earthquake the Izmit Provincial Cultural Directorate appropriated small areas for excavation including the site identified as Diocletian s Palace and a nearby Roman theatre In April 2016 a more extensive excavation of the palace was begun under the supervision of the Kocaeli Museum which estimated that the site covers 60 000 square meters 196 850 square feet 24 See also edit20 000 Martyrs of Nicomedia Nicaea present day Iznik another important city in Bithynia and the interim Byzantine capital city between 1204 and 1261 Empire of Nicaea following the Fourth Crusade in 1204 until the recapture of Constantinople by the Byzantines in 1261 Earlier the site of the Nicene Creed as well as the First Council of Nicaea and Second Council of Nicaea List of ancient Greek citiesReferences edit Nicomedia in the American Heritage Dictionary Archived from the original on 2014 09 30 Retrieved 2012 07 03 Peter Levi ed 1971 Guide to Greece By Pausanias Harmondsworth Penguin p 232 ISBN 0 14 044225 1 Cohen Getzel M 1995 The Hellenistic settlements in Europe the islands and Asia Minor p 400 ISBN 0 520 08329 6 Belt Section with Medallions of Constantius II and Faustina The Walters Art Museum a b c d e W L MacDonald 1976 NICOMEDIA NW Turkey The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites Princeton University Press Pliny the Younger Epist 10 33 Timothy D Barnes 1981 Constantine amp Eusebius p 22 a b Patricia Southern 2001 The Roman Empire From Severus to Constantine p 168 See C Texier Asie mineure Paris 1839 V Cuenet Turquie d Asie Paris 1894 See Ammianus Marcellinus 17 7 1 8 a b c Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press pp 1483 1484 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 nbsp Smith William ed 1854 1857 Nicomedeia Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray Kiminas Demetrius 2009 The Ecumenical Patriarchate Wildside Press LLC p 79 ISBN 978 1 4344 5876 6 Terezakis Yorgos Diocese of Nicomedia Ottoman Period Egkyklopaideia Meizonos Ellhnismoy M Asia Retrieved 13 November 2012 David Turner The Politics of Despair The Plague of 746 747 and Iconoclasm in the Byzantine Empire The Annual of the British School at Athens Vol 85 1990 p428 Geoffrey de Villehardouin translated by M R B Shaw Joinville and Villehardouin Chronicles of the Crusades London Penguin 1963 pp 147 154 56 Libanius Oratories p 61 7 18 Pliny the Younger Epistulae p 10 37 amp 38 Pliny the Younger Epistles p 10 74 Pliny the Younger Epistles p 10 49 Dio Cassius Roman History p 73 12 2 Cassius Dio Roman History p 51 20 7 Ancient underground city in izmit excites archaeology world Hurriyet Daily News 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2018 01 14 Ancient underground city in izmit excites archaeology world Hurriyet Daily News 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2018 01 14 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1854 1857 Nicomedeia Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicomedia amp oldid 1169648358, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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